A blog about discussions on various notable hoaxes that had sprang up over the centuries and why in the age of the Internet / Web 2.0 it still takes time and effort to confirm a hoax as such if it occurs.

Friday, February 6, 2015

UK PM David Cameron Hoax Call: Serious Lapse In Security?

Is the recent hoax call debacle of UK Prime Minister David
Cameron represented a serious lapse in security of Number 10 Downing Street?

By: Ringo Bones

Number 10 Downing Street confirms that the UK Prime Minister
ended the call after realizing that that the caller was falsely claiming to be
the UK Intelligence Director. Security procedures are being reviewed at Number
10 Downing Street after a hoax caller pretending to be the head of the GCHQ
managed to get through to Prime Minister David Cameron on Sunday, January 25,
2015. Cameron spoke to the imposter, who was claiming to be the GCHQ Director
Robert Hannigan, but Cameron soon ended the call when he realized that he was
being tricked.

According to Number 10, no sensitive information was
disclosed during the conversation between the men, which was described as “quite
brief”. In a separate incident, a caller rang GCHQ and managed to obtain Director
Hannigan’s mobile phone number.

A government spokeswoman said “Following two hoax calls to
government departments today, a notice has gone out to all departments to be on
alert for such calls.” “In the first instance, a call was made at GCHQ which
resulted in a disclosure of a mobile phone number for the director. The mobile
phone number provided is never used for calls involving classified information.
In the second instance, a hoax caller claiming to be the GCHQ director was
connected to the prime minister.” The spokeswoman said incidents of this kind
were taken seriously and procedures were being reviewed to see whether any
lessons need to be learned.

It is not the first time that the UK Prime Minister David
Cameron has been taken in by hoax callers and other hoaxers. In 2013, the prime
minister wrote a tweet to an account in the name of the Work and Pensions
minister Iain Duncan Smith. The account, however, was a spoof – about which
Prime Minister Cameron appeared ignorant.